IMBIV   05474
INSTITUTO MULTIDISCIPLINARIO DE BIOLOGIA VEGETAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Floral diversification and the evolution of brood-site deceptive pollination in Jaborosa (Solanaceae)
Autor/es:
MORÉ, M.; COCUCCI, A.A.; SÉRSIC, A.; BARBOZA G. E.
Revista:
TAXON
Editorial:
INT ASSOC PLANT TAXONOMY
Referencias:
Lugar: Viena; Año: 2015 vol. 64 p. 523 - 534
ISSN:
0040-0262
Resumen:
The genus Jaborosa (Solanaceae), which comprises 22 species endemic to southern South America, encompasses remarkable flower variation. To test if this interspecific variation is related to transitions in pollination mode and to major concomitant geological changes, phylogenetic relationships within the genus were reconstructed. To determine when such major transitions in flower traits occurred, divergence times were estimated and the evolution of relevant floral traits was studied. Sequences of four plastid spacer regions (trnH-pbsA, trnDGUC-trnT GGU, rpl32-trnLUAG, ndhF-rpl32) and one nuclear region (granule-bound starch synthase) were used to resolve relationships among 18 Jaborosa species, using species of the ?Atropina clade? as outgroup. Phylogenetic reconstruction strongly supports the monophyly of Jaborosa, with species resolved in two major clades: (1) a ?Lowland clade? (L) comprised of three noticeably sphingophylous species distributed below 1000 m and north of 36° S latitude, and (2) an ?Andean clade? (A) composed of the remaining species, which strongly differ in floral morphology and mainly occur at high altitudes (more than 3000 m in the Puna desert) or high latitudes (up to 53° S latitude in the Patagonia steppe of Tierra del Fuego). Species in the Andean clade have flowers that range from black, rotate, deceptive, saprophilous fly-pollinated flowers to green, tubular, nectar-producing flowers with a mixed pollination system. Estimation of divergence times suggests a split of Jaborosa from its sister genus Atropa L. at ca. 16.7 Ma. The split between the L and A clades possibly occurred ca. 10 Ma, with recent species diversification co-occurring with the uplift of the Andes during the Pleistocene (ca. 1?3 Ma). Reconstruction of ancestral states of pollination mode, altitudinal distribution, and floral traits (corolla colour, flower morphology, presence of nectar) suggests that pollination by moths probably evolved once within the L clade, whereas brood-site deceptive pollination probably evolved once within the A clade. These contrasting pollination modes are associated with changes in corolla colour, flower morphology and loss of a functional nectary.